You seem to be the exact opposite of your average "ENT SUX!!1!!" fanboy. I guess that makes two of us.I try to take each Star Trek series on it's own terms. I'm not super concerned with cannon continuity between shows.![]()
Three of us.


You seem to be the exact opposite of your average "ENT SUX!!1!!" fanboy. I guess that makes two of us.I try to take each Star Trek series on it's own terms. I'm not super concerned with cannon continuity between shows.![]()
There are actually very few continuity issues that can't be massaged to fit in, depending on how hard you want to work at it.
It's easier to deal with after knowing how it all works out.
At the time, however, yeah, I admit it, I was leading the jihad. It wouldn't be exaggerating to say that I'm one of the reasons Brannon Braga changed his email address on AOL.
As for characters, I didn't dislike any of them first time around, but now I'm re-watching I'm finding Reed incredibly annoying. I guess the aim was to be "quintessentially British" but it all seemed forced. If they feel like having a Brit aboard another show, let them just be themselves, please!
As for characters, I didn't dislike any of them first time around, but now I'm re-watching I'm finding Reed incredibly annoying. I guess the aim was to be "quintessentially British" but it all seemed forced. If they feel like having a Brit aboard another show, let them just be themselves, please!
Reed was my main annoyance with the series, felt the way he pranced about with his "phase pistol". It just annoyed me as it just wasn't real at all, he looked more like a 5 year old with a water pistol than a security/tactical officer.
In terms of Enterprise in general, it took me a while to warm to it. The theme music put me off from the start, and the southerner in Trip took a bit of getting used to.
But I felt it came into its own with every passing episode and I am disappointed it came to an end, and I came to liking Trip as one of the better characters in it. I also liked Archer and Phlox.
That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?Obviously, because Enterprise was produced AFTER the other series, but takes place BEFORE, realistically, you couldn't reference a yet-to-be-created story, but you'd think the Xindi incident, as big and pivotal as it was, would somehow have crept into the other shows in some sort of reference, even if it were as vague as "Earth was in danger of being destroyed in the mid 22nd century." You know what I mean?
ColeMercury said:That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?
That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?Obviously, because Enterprise was produced AFTER the other series, but takes place BEFORE, realistically, you couldn't reference a yet-to-be-created story, but you'd think the Xindi incident, as big and pivotal as it was, would somehow have crept into the other shows in some sort of reference, even if it were as vague as "Earth was in danger of being destroyed in the mid 22nd century." You know what I mean?
The only issue I have with the Xindi arc is this:That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?Obviously, because Enterprise was produced AFTER the other series, but takes place BEFORE, realistically, you couldn't reference a yet-to-be-created story, but you'd think the Xindi incident, as big and pivotal as it was, would somehow have crept into the other shows in some sort of reference, even if it were as vague as "Earth was in danger of being destroyed in the mid 22nd century." You know what I mean?
The only issue I have with the Xindi arc is this:That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?Obviously, because Enterprise was produced AFTER the other series, but takes place BEFORE, realistically, you couldn't reference a yet-to-be-created story, but you'd think the Xindi incident, as big and pivotal as it was, would somehow have crept into the other shows in some sort of reference, even if it were as vague as "Earth was in danger of being destroyed in the mid 22nd century." You know what I mean?
Xindi attack: 7 million dead (never mentioned in the future).
Boston Massacre: 5 dead. (still taught in American history classes more than 200 years later).
With four previous Trek series (three of which lasted 7 seasons), it seems to me that Bermaga could have assigned some unpaid intern to look for a passing mention of a catastrophe involving humans that could have been tied into the Xindi arc).
Yer welcome!The only issue I have with the Xindi arc is this:That doesn't really bother me. For instance, how often do you talk about the Franco-Prussian War?
Xindi attack: 7 million dead (never mentioned in the future).
Boston Massacre: 5 dead. (still taught in American history classes more than 200 years later).
With four previous Trek series (three of which lasted 7 seasons), it seems to me that Bermaga could have assigned some unpaid intern to look for a passing mention of a catastrophe involving humans that could have been tied into the Xindi arc).
Thank you, JiNX-01. That is exactly my point.
Re: What is your honest opinion of Enterprise?
Taiping Rebellion: 20 million dead. It happened in the 19th Century in China. When was the last time you mentioned it in a conversation?The only issue I have with the Xindi arc is this:
Xindi attack: 7 million dead (never mentioned in the future).
Boston Massacre: 5 dead. (still taught in American history classes more than 200 years later).
Given it's established that the Federation's founded in 2161, soon after that war ends, and the beginning of the third season was set in 2153... yeah, unless the war is meant to be eight years long I don't think so.This storyline could have easily been the Earth-Romulan War that we heard so much about, or at the very least, the prelude to it. Not to say, a war story is something I strive to see on Star Trek, but it would have been something far more familiar and in-line with the established history.
OK. I am not thoroughly acquainted with Chinese history. I admit it is a failing of the American education system that we tend to concentrate on American and European history.Taiping Rebellion: 20 million dead. It happened in the 19th Century in China. When was the last time you mentioned it in a conversation?The only issue I have with the Xindi arc is this:
Xindi attack: 7 million dead (never mentioned in the future).
Boston Massacre: 5 dead. (still taught in American history classes more than 200 years later).
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